FICTION

Level Up

illus. by Thien Pham. 160p. First Second. 2011. Tr $19.99. ISBN 978-1-59643-714-2; pap. $15.99. ISBN 978-1-59643-235-2. LC number unavailable.
COPY ISBN
Gr 9 Up—Yang returns to the Asian American coming-of-age motif that he addressed so brilliantly in American Born Chinese (Roaring Brook, 2006). Dennis Ouyang is a video-game addict and a disappointment to his father, who insists that his son grow up to be a gastroenterologist. Dennis struggles to negotiate the tricky balance between his father's wishes and his own somewhat-ambivalent desires. The arrival of four childlike angels whose sole purpose is to motivate the teen in his studies complicates his struggle and serves to move the story away from pure realism. The narrative resolves quite handily, with Dennis discovering a method to combine his video-game skills with a career in medicine. While the story does not achieve the level of American Born Chinese, it is not without charm and bright moments; when the true nature of the angels is revealed, it cleverly dovetails with other story elements. Pham's artwork conveys the story in a satisfactory way but is somewhat repetitive in appearance. Overall, an interesting work, but an additional purchase.—Douglas P. Davey, Halton Hills Public Library, Ontario, Canada
Yang (American Born Chinese) returns to familiar territory in this graphic novel about an Asian American college student torn between following his own path (video game expert) and his dead father's wishes (gastroenterologist). Pham's unfussy art (markedly different from Yang's own illustration style) provides a freshness that complements both the story's serious and humorous moments.
Readers will sympathize with Dennis’s struggle to figure out what he wants to do with his life. The angels he sees effectively make manifest the pressure he feels to succeed academically. Seamlessly moves from sad scenes to fantasy sequences and from episodes that take place at school to ones of Dennis playing video games. Thien Pham’s simple, stylized line drawings and subdued watercolors echo the surreal and understated tone of Gene Luen Yang’s narrative. The plot will keep readers guessing until the end.

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